Watching the moon and sending lovesickness poems

Poems about admiring the moon and sending homesickness come from Looking at the Moon and Thinking of a Far Away, Thinking of Quiet Night and Sending the Moon to Du Langzhong on the 15th night. The specific verse is as follows:

First, the moon, now full of the sea, the end of the world * * *. -Zhang Jiuling's Full Moon Philip Burkart.

Appreciation: the poet looks at the moon and misses his distant relatives, while his lover hates the long night, sleepless all night and misses his distant relatives. Moonlight is the cause and witness of lovesickness. The poet expresses his inner feelings by describing the hero's behavior. The whole poem is rich and quiet in artistic conception, vivid in language image, organically blended with emotion and scenery, gentle and moving.

Second, when I looked up, I found that it was moonlight. When I sank again, I suddenly remembered my home. -Li Bai's "Silent Night Thinking".

Appreciation: Thinking about a Quiet Night is a poem by Li Bai, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem describes the feelings of the lyric hero who lives abroad, looking up at the bright moon in the house on autumn night and missing his hometown.

The first two sentences describe the illusion of the protagonist in a specific foreign environment for an instant; The last two sentences deepen the hero's homesickness through the portrayal of action expressions. The whole poem uses metaphor and contrast to express homesickness. The language is fresh and simple, but the charm is implicit and endless, and it has been widely read.

Three, the moon tonight, I don't know who will fall in Qiu Si. -Wang Jian's "Fifteen Nights Looking at the Moon and Sending Du Langzhong".

Appreciation: With vivid language and rich imagination, the poet rendered the specific environment and atmosphere of enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival, bringing readers into a thoughtful mood far away from the moon. Sighing together, endless ending, parting together and thinking together are very euphemistic and touching. Its first impression is picturesque.

People in hometown miss their relatives far away; People who have left their homes look at their relatives far away. So, naturally, sing these two sentences. The poet no longer expresses his homesickness directly, but tells whose home the lingering sadness will fall in with a questioning euphemistic tone. The first two sentences describe the scenery without a word "moon"; The third sentence only points out that the moon is seen, which expands the scope of moon watchers.